Home :: Books :: Audiocassettes  

Arts & Photography
Audio CDs
Audiocassettes

Biographies & Memoirs
Business & Investing
Children's Books
Christianity
Comics & Graphic Novels
Computers & Internet
Cooking, Food & Wine
Entertainment
Gay & Lesbian
Health, Mind & Body
History
Home & Garden
Horror
Literature & Fiction
Mystery & Thrillers
Nonfiction
Outdoors & Nature
Parenting & Families
Professional & Technical
Reference
Religion & Spirituality
Romance
Science
Science Fiction & Fantasy
Sports
Teens
Travel
Women's Fiction
Errands

Errands

List Price: $3.99
Your Price:
Product Info Reviews

<< 1 2 >>

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Multi-Kleenex read for Fall.
Review: Judith Guest has once again, since "Ordinary People" wrapped grief around her readers and allowed them to actually feel what loss is like. I used to think I knew how death of a loved one would affect me, but now that I've read "Errands" I no longer can assume I'll know how to react. At first I thought that Annie the mother was a bitter and inflexible woman and did not truly love her children. However, as she tried to be everything to everyone - a mother, sister, daughter and good employee, I realized that she was only "acting" the roles in an effort to avoid the true grieving process. The children, unfortunately, suffered the most in this novel. Judith Guest's ability to take the reader into the minds of each different child helped one visualize in a more florid way the trauma that they endured. Annie was not an easy character to like; Harry, the oldest, made me want to reach out and help. Errands was a quick, easy read that brought you to tears yet warmed your heart

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: The complexity of family life
Review: Remember Ordinary People and it's stunning debut into the literary world? Well, here's author Judith Guest again with Errands, another great book about the complexity of family life. This time it's a young Midwestern family facing the death of the father. The family is so undone as their lives crumble that at times I was tempted to stop reading. If you are, too, gear up and stick with it; you'll be glad you did. Slowly, slowly, Guest allows us to watch their gradual return to a level or normalcy.
Judith Guest has a particularly good ear for dialogue, and in this book she reveals this talent best when siblings are fighting.
Great read.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Good reading, yet lacking in completeness
Review: The book was great reading, yet the ending left me&lt;br&gt;confused, and disappointed. I also am a mother of 3, and I&lt;br&gt; have a strong knowledge base of the grief process. I foundAnnie's reactions and inability to "be there" for her childrenquite depressing. I believe for most mothers, their reactions, responses, and displays of sympathy towards their children whoare coping with the loss of their father would be much moreintense, warm, loving, and caring. I believe most mothers areinnately in-tune to their children, regardless of their own personalcircumstances. The telling of the story by Ms. Guest is very enticing.The detailed information she gives to the places in Michigan was a treat for me, a native Michigan resident

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Realistic
Review: This book is based on Judith Guest's paternal grandparents. Judith Guest's grandmother never admitted that her husband was ill and he died when he was young. In ERRANDS, Annie Browner turns to her sister for support, just as Guest's grandmother turned to her sister for support. I have been reading many of the reviews and I can see that a lot of people find this book very realistic. As you can see, this is the reason why. I found this information in an article when I was doing research on her for a Minnesota Author project.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: the stages of grief described in a novel
Review: This is the story of widow Annie Browner and her three children and the way they cope with the sudden death of their husband and father from a brain tumor. They have all the difficulties you would expect. The death benefits are not generous. The kids have school problems. Annie has not been employed for 14 years and suddenly must find a job. Relatives are unbelievably cruel. Yet there are a whole bunch of people out there cheering them on in a quiet way. While I have never dealt with the sort of grief the Browners go through, it seems as if all of those stages you read about are in this book. At the end, you get the feeling that they are through the worst stages and that life will, after all, be worth living for the Browners. A good read.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: the stages of grief described in a novel
Review: This is the story of widow Annie Browner and her three children and the way they cope with the sudden death of their husband and father from a brain tumor. They have all the difficulties you would expect. The death benefits are not generous. The kids have school problems. Annie has not been employed for 14 years and suddenly must find a job. Relatives are unbelievably cruel. Yet there are a whole bunch of people out there cheering them on in a quiet way. While I have never dealt with the sort of grief the Browners go through, it seems as if all of those stages you read about are in this book. At the end, you get the feeling that they are through the worst stages and that life will, after all, be worth living for the Browners. A good read.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Nicholas Mueller
Review: This was my first reading of Judith and I really enjoyed "Errands". I did feel rather involved in the characters and their emotional rollercoasters. It was very pleasing and easy to read, understand, and relate to. I am looking forward to reading more of her Novels

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Life's Errands
Review: When so many novels scoot by on waves of glitz and style, Judith Guest's "Errands" moves slowly, deliberately through the daily life of a family in Michigan. There are no movie stars, power brokers or politicians here. The characters are, as her previous novel was titled, "ordinary people" living ordinary lives.
The critical event of the novel is the fatal illness of Keith, husband to Annie and father to Harry, Jimmy and Julie. Annie is strong, so strong that she cannot let herself be taken under by the grief and anger that well up inside her. So she holds herself straight, takes a job, snaps at her children, and keeps going. Meanwhile, the children fall apart, each in his or her own way. Annie's sister, Jess, watches the family's ordeal. And she steps in when she is needed, while trying not to push too hard. She has her own problems, emotionally thrown by her intense love affair with a married man.
In the hands of another writer, Annie would be a very unsympathetic character - cold and aloof, demanding from her children the same stoic strength she requires of herself. Yet Guest is able to show us the suffering inside Annie, and how she tortures herself more than anyone else as she tries to hold on to sanity in the only way she knows.
This book is not a quick read, but a thoughtful, powerful and moving experience. The beauty of Guest's writing lies in her willingness to look at everyday life and accept it, believe in it. She shows that how we face and deal with the real challenges of life is what matters in the end.


<< 1 2 >>

© 2004, ReviewFocus or its affiliates